Dockets: T-1381-15
T-1602-16
Citation:
2016 FC 1223
Ottawa, Ontario, November 7, 2016
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Zinn
Docket: T-1381-15
BETWEEN:
|
THE BRITISH
COLUMBIA CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION,THE CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF REFUGEE
LAWYERS
AND ASAD ANSARI
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION AND
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondents
|
Docket: T-1602-16
AND BETWEEN:
|
THE BRITISH
COLUMBIA CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION AND THE CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF REFUGEE
LAWYERS
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
IMMIGRATION, REFUGEES AND CITIZENSHIP AND
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondents
|
ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
and The Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers [the Moving Parties] move for
an Order staying the operation of subsection 10(1) of the Citizenship Act,
RSC 1985, c C-29 as amended, on an interlocutory basis pending the resolution
of the constitutionality and validity of that section in Monla v Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), Court File T-1570-15 [Monla] and the
cases being jointly case-managed with it [the Group 2 Revocation Judicial
Review Applications].
[2]
Subsection 10(1) of the Citizenship Act
provides that the Minister of Immigration and Citizenship (now the Minister of
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship) [the Minister] may revoke the Canadian
citizenship of a person if it was “obtained, retained,
renounced or resumed … by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances.”
Subject to
subsection 10.1(1), the Minister may revoke a person’s citizenship or
renunciation of citizenship if the Minister is satisfied on a balance of
probabilities that the person has obtained, retained, renounced or resumed
his or her citizenship by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances.
|
Sous réserve du
paragraphe 10.1(1), le ministre peut révoquer la citoyenneté d’une personne
ou sa répudiation lorsqu’il est convaincu, selon la prépondérance des
probabilités, que l’acquisition, la conservation ou la répudiation de la
citoyenneté de la personne ou sa réintégration dans celle-ci est intervenue
par fraude ou au moyen d’une fausse déclaration ou de la dissimulation
intentionnelle de faits essentiels.
|
[3]
The Court has under case-management the Group 2
Revocation Judicial Review Applications brought by individuals who have either
received a Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship from the Minister pursuant to
subsection 10(3) of the Citizenship Act – a pre-condition to revocation-
or who have had their citizenship revoked. Court file T-1381-15 is included in
the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review Applications.
[4]
The revocation procedure in section 10 of the Citizenship
Act was changed by the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act, SC
2014, c 22, which came into force on May 28, 2015. The Group 2 Revocation
Judicial Review Applications challenge the constitutionality of those
amendments.
[5]
By Order dated January 19, 2016 [the Monla
Stay Order], the Court enjoined the Minister from taking any steps or
proceedings under the notice to revoke citizenship in eight specific
applications for leave and judicial review until they are finally determined.
[6]
Following a case-management conference held
February 5, 2016, with respect to the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review
Applications, the Court issued an Order dated February 23, 2016, that
effectively enjoined the Minister from taking any steps to act on any future
notices to revoke citizenship provided the affected person brought an application
for judicial review of that decision [the Case-management Order]. Paragraph 3
of the Case-management Order provided as follows:
The Minister shall take no steps or
proceedings under a notice to revoke Canadian citizenship issued under the Citizenship
Act as amended by the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
relating to an application for judicial review that is now or in the future
included in the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review Applications, until notice
is provided to the applicant and the Common Legal Issues have been litigated on
the basis of the Lead Cases have been finally determined.
[7]
The Court has set out three questions that are
to be addressed by the Court for the Group 2 Revocation Judicial Review
Applications on the basis of the identified eight lead cases, which are to be argued
at a three-day hearing scheduled to commence in Toronto on November 15, 2016:
a. May the Minister issue a new notice of revocation of Canadian
citizenship after the coming into force of the Strengthening Canadian
Citizenship Act, thereby engaging the new revocation procedure or, by
virtue of the transitional provisions of the Strengthening Canadian
Citizenship Act, where the Minister had issued a revocation notice under
the former Act (and the applicant requested a referral to the Federal Court but
no such referral was made by the Minister), is the revocation to be determined
in accordance with the provisions of the former Act?
b. Are any of subsections 10(1), 10(3), or 10(4) of the Citizenship
Act as amended by the Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act,
unconstitutional as violating section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and/or sections 1(a) and 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of
Rights, SC 1960, c 44?
- Does section 10
of the Citizenship Act as amended by the Strengthening Canadian
Citizenship Act, subject an individual to cruel and unusual treatment
in violation of section 12 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms?
[8]
Where an applicant’s citizenship has been
revoked prior to the filing of an application to review the revocation
decision, the Court in paragraph 4 of the Case-management Order ordered that
the Minister could continue the process and require that the applicant return
his or her Canadian passport, unless prevented by further Order following a
motion by the applicant:
If the Minister has revoked an applicant’s
Canadian citizenship under the Citizenship Act as amended by the Strengthening
Canadian Citizenship Act, then, subject to any further Order of the Court,
the Minister may request the applicant to return his or her Canadian passport.
[9]
The Moving Parties submit that they have public
interest standing to bring these applications and this motion. They further
submit that the question of whether a stay should be granted, as requested, has
already been determined by this Court in the Monla Stay Order and that “nothing dictates a different result on this motion.”
[10]
The Moving Parties accept that “for those who have the ability, knowledge and resources to
identify, contact and retain counsel at an early stage, they receive individual
stays of their proceedings as a matter of course.” They bring this
motion for those persons receiving a notice of intent to revoke citizenship who
do not commence an application for judicial review “either
because they lack the knowledge, resources or skills needed to retain counsel.”
[11]
The Minister opposes the motion. He submits
that the Court ought to deny the Moving Parties public interest standing in these
applications “since individual litigants directly
affected by the impugned legislation can reasonably and effectively challenge
it.” Moreover, the Minister submits that the issues raised in these
applications will be addressed next month when the three common issues are
before the Court for decision “on a full record.”
[12]
I have decided that the question of the public
interest standing of the Moving Parties does not need to be decided because
this motion must fail merely by application of the well-established principles
relating to the granting of the equitable remedy of an injunction.
[13]
The Supreme Court of Canada in Manitoba
(Attorney General) v Metropolitan Stores (MTS) Ltd, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 110
adopted the three-stage test to be applied when considering an application for
an interlocutory injunction. A court must determine that there is a serious
issue or question to be tried, that the applicant would suffer irreparable harm
if the injunction were to be refused, and that the balance of convenience
(assessed by examining which of the parties will suffer the greater harm from
granting or refusing the injunction) rests with the applicant. All three of
these must be met to be granted injunctive relief.
[14]
In the motion before the Court, I am not
persuaded that the Moving Parties, even if granted public interest standing,
can establish irreparable harm.
[15]
In RJR – MacDonald Inc v Canada, [1994] 1
SCR 311 at 341 the Supreme Court of Canada explained what is meant by the term ‘irreparable harm’:
“Irreparable” refers to the nature of the
harm suffered rather than its magnitude. It is harm which either cannot be
quantified in monetary terms or which cannot be cured, usually because one
party cannot collect damages from the other.
[16]
Harm which can be avoided, or if unavoidable can
be cured, is not irreparable harm.
[17]
Justice Stratas in Glooscap Heritage Society
v Canada (Minister of National Revenue – MNR), 2012 FCA 255 at para 31,
explained what a party seeking an injunction must establish in regards to
irreparable harm:
To establish irreparable harm, there must be
evidence at a convincing level of particularity that demonstrates a real
probability that unavoidable irreparable harm will result unless a stay is
granted. Assumptions, speculations, hypotheticals and arguable assertions, unsupported
by evidence, carry no weight.
[18]
All that the Moving Parties have provided
regarding irreparable harm is a single statement in the affidavits from
officials of each of the two parties that are nearly identical and which reads:
The BCCLA [or CARL] is deeply concerned that
there are individuals who have received such notices, but have been unable to
avail themselves of what is a de facto right to a stay under Monla,
either because they lack the knowledge, resources or skills needed to retain
counsel.
[19]
The Minister submits that these
statements fall within the description of “assumptions,
speculations, hypotheticals and arguable assertions” and is not evidence
of irreparable harm. The Moving Parties submit that the evidence of the gap
between the number of notices of revocation that have been issued and the much lower
number of applications for judicial review establishes that there is a strong
probability that there are some persons that fall within the category of
persons who have not sought the de facto stay under Monla “because they lack the knowledge, resources or skills needed
to retain counsel”.
[20]
In my view, there is a more fundamental problem with
the request made by the Moving Parties: They cannot establish that the harm
alleged is not avoidable.
[21]
At the time of the motions which led to the
granting of the Monla Stay Order came before the Court, those applicants
had no other relief available to them to avoid the harm of the revocation
proceeding, other than to seek the Court’s intervention by way of a stay of the
revocation process. The harm to them was unavoidable and the Court found that
it was also irreparable harm.
[22]
Here, as the Moving Parties admit, the harm to
anyone in receipt of a Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship is avoidable.
They need merely file an application to this Court for leave and judicial
review of that revocation notice and they are granted an automatic stay. To
date, many have done so.
[23]
If now or in the future there are persons in
receipt of a Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship who through ignorance or
lack of resources fail to challenge that decision in this Court, does that
change the harm from an avoidable one to an unavoidable one? I think not.
[24]
The harm described in the Reasons leading to the
Monla Stay Order, is either an unavoidable harm or an avoidable harm –
it cannot be both at the same time. At the time the Monla Stay Order
was issued, it was unavoidable. After the Monla Case-management Order
issued, that harm became avoidable. The failure of a person, for whatever
reason, to take advantage of the de facto stay available, does not
change the fact that it is available to them and that it will avoid the harm.
[25]
Because the harm that may follow receipt of a
Notice of Intent to Revoke Citizenship is now an avoidable harm, injunctive
relief is not available and these motions must be dismissed.